Abstract

BackgroundThe native microflora associated with mosquitoes have important roles in mosquito development and vector competence. Sequencing of bacterial V3 region from 16S rRNA genes across the developmental stages of Culex mosquitoes (early and late larval instars, pupae and adults) was used to test the hypothesis that bacteria found in the larval stage of Culex are transstadially transmitted to the adult stage, and to compare the microbiomes of field-collected versus laboratory-reared mosquitoes.ResultsBeta diversity analysis revealed that bacterial community structure differed among three life stages (larvae, pupae and adults) of Culex tarsalis. Although only ~2 % of the total number of bacterial OTUs were found in all stages, sequences from these OTUs accounted for nearly 82 % of the total bacterial sequences recovered from all stages. Thorsellia (Gammaproteobacteria) was the most abundant bacterial taxon found across all developmental stages of field-collected Culex mosquitoes, but was rare in mosquitoes from laboratory-reared colonies. The proportion of Thorsellia sequences in the microbiomes of mosquito life stages varied ontogenetically with the greatest proportions recovered from the pupae of C. tarsalis and the lowest from newly emerged adults. The microbiome of field-collected late instar larvae was not influenced significantly by differences in the microbiota of the habitat due to habitat age or biopesticide treatments. The microbiome diversity was the greatest in the early instar larvae and the lowest in laboratory-reared mosquitoes.ConclusionsBacterial communities in early instar C. tarsalis larvae were significantly more diverse when compared to late instar larvae, pupae and newly emerged adults. Some of the bacterial OTUs found in the early instar larvae were also found across developmental stages. Thorsellia dominated the bacterial communities in field-collected immature stages but occurred at much lower relative abundance in adults. Differences in microbiota observed in larval habitats did not influence bacterial community profiles of late instar larvae or adults. However, bacterial communities in laboratory-reared C. tarsalis larvae differed significantly from the field. Determining the role of Thorsellia in mosquitoes and its distribution across different species of mosquitoes warrants further investigation.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12866-015-0475-8) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • The native microflora associated with mosquitoes have important roles in mosquito development and vector competence

  • Proteobacteria (56 %), Bacteroidetes (15 %), Cyanobacteria (14 %), Firmicutes (7 %), Actinobacteria (2 %), and Spirochaetes (2 %) were the most abundant bacterial phyla found in developmental stages of Culex mosquitoes (Additional file 1: Table S1)

  • The relative abundance of bacterial taxa changed across the mosquito developmental stages, Proteobacteria were the dominant bacteria found in the guts of C. tarsalis (Fig. 1)

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Summary

Introduction

The native microflora associated with mosquitoes have important roles in mosquito development and vector competence. Bacteria ingested by the immature stages of mosquitoes (Culicidae) are generally known to provide nutrition [1, 2], facilitate successful development [3, 4], and influence vector competence [5,6,7,8]. Circumstantial evidence in Anopheles mosquitoes suggested that some bacteria species found in larval stages persist through metamorphosis and are transferred to adults [18, 19]. Most other studies were based on laboratory-reared mosquitoes, fed standardized diets, and raised under controlled environmental conditions for several generations These artificial conditions are likely to restrict and/or alter the host microbiomes of lab-raised insect populations relative to natural populations (e.g. Drosophila; [22])

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